Progression through mitosis promotes PARP inhibitor-induced cytotoxicity in homologous recombination-deficient cancer cells.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
28714471
Description
Mutations in homologous recombination (HR) genes BRCA1 and BRCA2 predispose to tumorigenesis. HR-deficient cancers are hypersensitive to Poly (ADP ribose)-polymerase (PARP) inhibitors, but can acquire resistance and relapse. Mechanistic understanding how PARP inhibition induces cytotoxicity in HR-deficient cancer cells is incomplete. Here we find PARP inhibition to compromise replication fork stability in HR-deficient cancer cells, leading to mitotic DNA damage and consequent chromatin bridges and lagging chromosomes in anaphase, frequently leading to cytokinesis failure, multinucleation and cell death. PARP-inhibitor-induced multinucleated cells fail clonogenic outgrowth, and high percentages of multinucleated cells are found in vivo in remnants of PARP inhibitor-treated Brca2;p53and Brca1;p53mammary mouse tumours, suggesting that mitotic progression promotes PARP-inhibitor-induced cell death. Indeed, enforced mitotic bypass through EMI1 depletion abrogates PARP-inhibitor-induced cytotoxicity. These findings provide insight into the cytotoxic effects of PARP inhibition, and point at combination therapies to potentiate PARP inhibitor treatment of HR-deficient tumours.
Date of Publication
2017-07-17
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Schoonen, Pepijn M | |
Talens, Francien | |
Stok, Colin | |
Gogola, Ewa | |
Heijink, Anne Margriet | |
Bouwman, Peter | |
Foijer, Floris | |
Tarsounas, Madalena | |
Jonkers, Jos | |
van Vugt, Marcel A T M |
Additional Credits
Series
Nature communications
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
2041-1723
Access(Rights)
open.access